BAGHDAD (AP) — A prominent Iraqi Christian religious leader who left Baghdad amid a political dispute last year returned to the capital this week at the invitation of the country’s prime minister after nine months of self-imposed exile in northern Iraq’s Kurdish region. Cardinal Louis Sako was welcomed warmly by a church packed with members of the country’s Christian minority as he led his first mass in Baghdad on Friday after returning the day before. Sako had withdrawn from his headquarters in Baghdad to the Kurdish regional capital, Irbil, last July after Iraqi President Abdul Latif Rashid revoked a decree recognizing his position as patriarch of the Chaldeans, Iraq’s largest Christian denomination and one of the Catholic Church’s eastern rites. The Iraqi president downplayed his revocation of Sako’s recognition as bureaucratic housekeeping, claiming it did not diminish the patriarch’s legal or religious status, but Sako called it an affront to the church and said he would not return to Baghdad until his recognition was reinstated. |
Giants place pitcher Blake Snell on 1511 Republican "fake electors" indicted for falsely declaring Trump won ArizonaEverton beats Liverpool 2UN calls for probe into mass graves at Shifa and Nasser hospitals in GazaAuthorities in Togo are cracking down on media and the opposition, report says ahead of electionGov. Gavin Newsom wants to let Arizona doctors provide abortions in CaliforniaWednesday casts Thandiwe Newton in highlyMassachusetts House launches budget debate, including proposed spending on shelters, public transitThe Valley's Michelle Lally moves on from husband Jesse with rumored new boyfriend Aaron NoslerGisele Bundchen wears cropped gray leggings with a sleeveless white tee for gym session in Miami